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  • Book: Evil tales obscure Goldhagen's point

    Sunday Business Post
    January 10, 2010


    Evil tales obscure Goldhagen's point


    Worse Than War Genocide, Eliminationism and the Ongoing Assault on Humanity
    By Daniel Jonah Goldhagen
    Little, Brown, 30

    You have to steel yourself to read a book by Daniel Goldhagen. It's
    tough going, wading through rivers of blood as he plots the course of
    various genocidal episodes around the world. If it's not easy for the
    average reader, consider how much worse it must be for the author,
    being the son of a Holocaust survivor.

    Goldhagen's first book, Hitler's Willing Executioners, was like a
    journey into the pit of hell, examining how ordinary Germans had
    behaved during the Holocaust.

    Among other horrific aspects, the details of death marches in the
    closing months of World War II were particularly harrowing.

    His second book, A Moral Reckoning, turned the spotlight on the role
    of the Catholic Church in the Holocaust. The message of this third
    volume seems to be: they're all at it.

    But somewhere in the fog of evil, Goldhagen's thesis becomes blurred.
    Does he mean we are all capable of mass murder, or that genocide
    happens because ordinary people turn a blind eye? Does he mean that
    what he terms 'eliminationism' is inherent in the human condition? If
    so, how can we cleanse the world of such behaviour? In this latest
    book, the author comes across as heavy on the problem but light on the
    solution.

    In one respect, the author isn't telling us anything new. He lines up
    the usual suspects: Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot and Mehmet Talat
    (Turkey's interior minister at the time of the Armenian genocide,
    1915-16). But added to these is a wealth of detail on ''mass
    slaughters and eliminations in Indonesia, Kenya, Burundi, Rwanda, the
    former Yugoslavia, Sudan and many more''.

    Just when you think the list might be coming to an end, Goldhagen
    makes further additions to it, writing of Guatemalans killing Maya,
    Hutu killing Tutsi in Rwanda, Tutsi killing Hutu in Burundi,
    Pakistanis killing opponents in Bangladesh, Ukrainians helping Germans
    to exterminate Jews, and Germans killing the Herero and Nama tribes in
    South-West Africa (now Namibia).

    Few would argue with the author's point that the 'dehumanization' and
    'demonization' of those targeted for extermination plays a key role in
    softening up the perpetrators for their role as mass murderers.

    But Irish readers might be a little uneasy at some gaps in an
    otherwise detailed study. For instance, Goldhagen cites the British
    suppression of the Kikuyu people (during the Mau Mau rebellion of the
    early 1950s) as an example of the eliminationist mindset, but there is
    no reference to such activities elsewhere in the British sphere of
    influence.

    At first, I thought this was because the author was focusing solely on
    20th century incidents, but he also refers to 19th century events such
    as early Belgian rule in the Congo and the fate of the native American
    Indians.

    It is puzzling therefore why he has chosen to ignore the events of 150
    years ago, when the population of Ireland fell from eight to four
    million during and after the Famine.

    Goldhagen cannot have missed the recent controversy which erupted when
    an American college included the Irish Famine in its international
    studies on genocide. So how can it be that he fails to mention the
    death of one million Irish people in a Famine exacerbated by Britain's
    refusal to unload ships laden with food in Dublin port and elsewhere?
    Strangely, there is only one reference to Ireland in the entire book:
    a chilling extract from the minutes of the Wannsee conference in
    January 1942, which marked down 4,000 Jews in Eire for deportation to
    the death camps.

    As to why genocide occurs at all, the author lays the blame, in part
    at least, at the door of the great colonial powers: ''European
    colonizers treated people of color the world over as beings of a
    different kind, often as barely human, to be dispensed with, including
    as slaves, or production factors, or corpses, according to convenience
    and practicality

    . . . It may be that in some societies and cultures (or subcultures)
    there has been a generalized disregard for human life, save perhaps
    people's own reference group, so killing people has not been the
    existentially monumental and morally significant act that, during our
    age, it otherwise has been."

    So what is Goldhagen's remedy or recipe for making the world a better
    place? He argues that it's necessary to ''motivate the world's
    democracies to organize themselves to create a more democratic,
    secure, and prosperous world."

    The author's vision is for ''A serious international prevention,
    intervention, and punishment regime to stop mass-murderous and
    eliminationist states and leaders from warring on their peoples and
    humanity."

    Fair enough, but is he talking about a beefed-up United Nations, a
    stronger EU rapid reaction force, or something else entirely? Sadly,
    he doesn't spell this out.
    From: Baghdasarian
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